Monday, September 20, 2010

Late, but important.

Last Saturday, September 11, I had my blogger dashboard up ready to post a tribute to 9/11 when I realized the book I really wanted to quote was returned to the library. After re-checking out the book (must buy this one!), I am able to share a part of the book with you.

Here is an excerpt of Raising Kids for True Greatness, explaining the difference between successful people and truly great people:


"The terrorists who slammed airplanes into the World Trade Center caught us completely off guard. In the middle of a business-as-usual morning, they showed us how naive we were about the magnitude of their hate and the extent to which we could be humbled by their violence.

Many successful people found themselves trapped in the clutches of this ghastly event. At 9:03 that Tuesday morning, their SAT scores and the cars they drove to work meant nothing. There was very little that their pedigrees and resumes could do for them. The famous as well as the obscure became equals in the statistics. In the Twin Towers, 'Who's Who died side by side with Who's he?'

But in the midst of this crisis, there were magnificent people who responded to the urgency of the moment and gave everything they had for the sake of others. as the successful rushed down the stairs of the World Trade Center, the truly great ran up. as the well-heeled and comfortable ran for their lives, the truly great slipped inside the nightmare to see what they could do to help those who were left behind.

And after the smoke cleared, thousands of truly great people stepped out from their quiet positions within the ranks of successful Americans and opened their hearts and their wallets to those whose lives had been shattered by this cataclysmic event.

Isn't it ironic that as a nation we worship those who are successful, but when tragedy strikes, our survival depends upon those who are great? A cry for help is always answered first by people who live for something more valuable than their own fame or fortune. They respond even though there isn't a thing in it for them.

That's why, when it's time to bury our dead, we mourn the loss of those who were successful, but we celebrate the memory of those who were truly great-the firefighters, the EMT's, the rescue workers, and the countless civilians who sacrificed everything they had for people they'd never met."

The author, Dr, Tim Kimmel, goes on to explain in his book that you can be both successful and great. However, if your only aim is success you may miss an amazing story for your life that God has planned. The key is not short-changing our kids by emphasizing only what the world views as important, but allowing them to go beyond what we could imagine and achieve true greatness.

2 comments:

Jen said...

Wow. That is so powerful. My family and I watched a 9/11 documentary recently and it just knocked the wind out of me - as if it was the first time I'd seen it. Despite the tragedy, it amazed me the way it unified people and brought out their best. Sometimes trials have a way of bonding people that even blessings don't.
Thanks for sharing - you totally need to buy that book! :)

TheFitnessFreak said...

Very true! After all we are not of this world, so I guess we shouldn't constantly try to attain the world's idea of greatness.